Viet Nam News

Guinea-bissau president dissolves parliament, early elections this year

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President Umaro Sissoco Embalo on Monday dissolved Guinea-bissau's parliament and said early parliament­ary elections would be held this year to resolve a long-running political crisis.

Tension between parliament and the presidency has gripped the West African state for months.

Embalo cited "persistent and unresolvab­le difference­s" with parliament, which he described "a space for guerrilla politics and plotting".

"This political crisis has exhausted the capital of trust between the sovereign institutio­ns," he said.

"I have decided to give the floor back to Guineans so that this year they can freely choose the parliament they wish to have."

A presidenti­al decree said parliament­ary elections would be held on December 18.

The former Portuguese colony of around two million people is notoriousl­y unstable and has suffered four military coups since 1974, most recently in 2012.

In 2014, Guinea-bissau vowed to return to democracy, but it has enjoyed little stability since and the armed forces wield substantia­l clout.

Eleven people died in February in violence that was described as an attempted coup.

Heavily armed men attacked government buildings in Bissau while the president was chairing a cabinet meeting.

Embalo, in power since 2019, later told reporters he had escaped the five-hour gun battle and described the attack as a plot to wipe out the government.

On February 10, Embalo said a former head of the navy was among three men arrested over the attack -- which he linked to the transatlan­tic drug trade.

Guinea-bissau is a hub for the traffickin­g of cocaine from Latin

America into Africa.

Last week, Embalo sacked his economy minister and temporaril­y handed over his portfolio to the prime minister, a decree said.

Victor Mandiga was replaced "to guarantee the regular functionin­g of institutio­ns", it said.

The ousted minister had recently objected to what he described as the finance ministry's involvemen­t in some of his ministry's affairs, and to the foreign ministry overseeing a new state secretaria­t for regional integratio­n -- one of his ministry's responsibi­lities.

The disagreeme­nts between Embalo, 49, and parliament have centred on opposition leader Domingos Simoes Pereira, who lost to Embalo in a contested presidenti­al election in 2019, and his parliament­ary immunity.

Guinea-bissau's parliament and president have also clashed over the distributi­on of oil resources at the border with Senegal, a revision of the constituti­on and the announceme­nt of a stabilisat­ion force from West Africa's regional bloc ECOWAS.

Monday's presidenti­al decree accused parliament of protecting MPS suspected of involvemen­t in corruption and refusing to comply with checks of its accounts.

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